Abstract

The purpose of this study was to assess the combined effects of type 2 diabetes (T2D) and hearing loss on the level of distress in individuals with diabetes. The 2021 National Health Interview Survey included 2633 adults (ages 18+) with T2D who reported perceived hearing loss, level of diabetes-related distress, household composition, and demographic characteristics. Logistic regressions evaluated these association between hearing loss and diabetes distress controlling for age, income, region of residence, marital status, rurality, educational attainment, insurance coverage, time since diabetes diagnosis, and household composition. Interaction effects examined differential associations between demographic groups. About 3.5% of adults with T2D in the sample reported hearing loss, and 70% reported diabetes-related distress. Results indicated that diabetes distress was significantly more likely among individuals with hearing loss (OR = 2.08) relative to their hearing counterparts. Additionally, females (OR = 1.50), low-income earners (OR = 1.84), middle-income earners (OR = 1.41), non-Hispanic Blacks (OR = 1.58), and Hispanics (OR = 1.75) with diabetes had higher odds of reporting diabetes distress. Interaction analyses indicated that non-Hispanic Blacks and Hispanics with hearing loss had a 37% and 19%, respectively, higher likelihood of diabetes distress relative to non-Hispanic Whites with hearing loss. Diabetes distress was more likely among individuals with hearing loss. These findings suggest the communication challenges of individuals with hearing loss may explain the observed differences in distress.

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